Content area

Abstract

Background

Women in the criminal justice (CJ) system experience complex and comorbid medical, psychiatric, and substance use disorders, which often contribute to CJ involvement. To identify intersections between CJ and health needs, we calculated Spearman r correlations between concurrent CJ and clinical assessments from women on probation in Connecticut who were enrolled in a clinical trial. We examined longitudinal trends in CJ risk scores over 9 years of observation (2005–2014), modeling time to probation recidivism with shared gamma frailty models and comparing contiguous time points by Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank tests.

Results

Women (N = 31) were predominantly white (67.7%) with at least some high school education (58.1%) and mostly unemployed (77.4%) and unstably housed (83.9%). Most met clinical criteria for severe substance use and/or psychiatric disorders. Concurrent measures of substance use, mental health, social support, partnerships, and risk by the Level of Service Inventory-Revised (LSI-R) and clinical assessments were not significantly correlated. The LSI-R personal/emotional sub-score, however, positively correlated with the Addiction Severity Index psychiatric composite score (r = 0.40, 95% CI 0.03–0.68, p = 0.03). After adjusting for age, race and number of previous events, having some high school education versus none marginally decreased the hazard for probation recidivism and having > 5 inpatient psychiatric admissions versus none increased the hazard of probation recidivism 7-fold (HR 7.49, 95% CI 1.33–42.12, p = 0.022). Women with 0–1 recurrent probation terms (n = 16) had a significantly lower mean LSI-R score than those with 2–4 recurrent probation terms (35.9 [SD 6.4] versus 39.2 [SD 3.0], p = 0.019), but repeated LSI-R scores did not change over time, nor vary significantly beyond the group mean.

Conclusions

In this small, quantitative study of women on probation, widely used CJ assessment tools poorly reflected women’s comorbid medical, psychiatric, and substance use needs and varied minimally over time. Findings illustrate the limitations of contemporary CJ assessment tools for women with complex needs. The field requires more comprehensive assessments of women’s social and health needs to develop individualized targeted case plans that simultaneously improve health and CJ outcomes.

Details

Title
Evaluating concurrent validity of criminal justice and clinical assessments among women on probation
Author
Odio, Camila D 1 ; Carroll, Megan 2 ; Glass, Susan 3 ; Bauman, Ashley 4 ; Taxman, Faye S 5 ; Meyer, Jaimie P 6 

 Department of Internal Medicine, Yale New Haven Health, New Haven, CT, USA 
 Department of Biostatistics, Yale School of Public Health, New Haven, CT, USA; Department of Epidemiology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA 
 Connecticut Judicial Branch, Court Support Services Division, Wethersfield, CT, USA 
 Bauman Consulting Group, LLC, Loveland, OH, USA 
 Criminology, Law & Society, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA 
 AIDS Program, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA 
Pages
1-10
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Apr 2018
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
e-ISSN
21947899
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2022787804
Copyright
Health & Justice is a copyright of Springer, (2018). All Rights Reserved.